Anita Steckel
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Anita Slavin Arkin Steckel (February 24, 1930 – March 16, 2012) was an American feminist artist known for paintings and
photomontage Photomontage is the process and the result of making a composite photograph by cutting, gluing, rearranging and overlapping two or more photographs into a new image. Sometimes the resulting composite image is photographed so that the final image ...
s with sexual imagery. She was also the founder of the arts organization "The Fight Censorship Group", whose other members included
Hannah Wilke Hannah Wilke (born Arlene Hannah Butter; March 7, 1940 – January 28, 1993) was an American painter, sculptor, photographer, video artist and performance artist. Wilke's work is known for exploring issues of feminism, sexuality and femininity. B ...
,
Louise Bourgeois Louise Joséphine Bourgeois (; 25 December 191131 May 2010) was a French-American artist. Although she is best known for her large-scale sculpture and installation art, Bourgeois was also a prolific painter and printmaker. She explored a varie ...
,
Judith Bernstein Judith Bernstein (born October 14, 1942) is a New York artist best known for her phallic drawings and paintings. Bernstein uses her art as a vehicle for her outspoken feminist and anti-war activism, provocatively drawing psychological links betwee ...
,
Martha Edelheit Martha Nilsson Edelheit (born September 3, 1931, in New York City), also known as Martha Ross Edelheit, is an American-born artist currently living in Sweden. She is known for her feminist art of the 1960s and 1970s, which focuses on erotic nude ...
, Eunice Golden,
Juanita McNeely Juanita McNeely (born 1936 in St. Louis, Missouri) is an American feminist artist known for her bold works that illustrate the nude female experience in her figurative paintings, prints, paper cut-outs and ceramic pieces. Feminist elements in her ...
, Barbara Nessim, Anne Sharpe and
Joan Semmel Joan Semmel (born October 19, 1932) is an American feminist painter, professor, and writer. She is best known for her large scale realistic nude self portraits as seen from her perspective looking down. Education and political involvement Semme ...
.


Early life and education

Steckel was born in
Brooklyn, New York Brooklyn () is a borough of New York City, coextensive with Kings County, in the U.S. state of New York. Kings County is the most populous county in the State of New York, and the second-most densely populated county in the United States, be ...
, to Russian Jewish immigrants Dora and Hyman Arkin. She had an abusive mother and a father who struggled with a gambling problem and left home after an early graduation from the High School of Music & Art in Manhattan (now Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art). As a single young woman, Steckel dated Marlon Brando and worked on a Norwegian freighter that traveled to South America for two months. She also worked as a dancing instructor, where she won a competition and was crowned the "Mambo Queen of Southern California". She then went back to New York to study at Cooper Union, and Alfred University, as well as completing advanced study at the Art Students League of New York with
Edwin Dickinson Edwin Walter Dickinson (October 11, 1891 – December 2, 1978) was an American painter and draftsman best known for psychologically charged self-portraits, quickly painted landscapes, which he called ''premier coups'', and large, hauntingly enigma ...
She also taught for several years at
The Art Students League of New York The Art Students League of New York is an art school at 215 West 57th Street in Manhattan, New York City, New York. The League has historically been known for its broad appeal to both amateurs and professional artists. Although artists may stu ...
. In 1970, Steckel moved to the Westbeth Artists' Housing in
Manhattan, New York Manhattan (), known regionally as the City, is the most densely populated and geographically smallest of the five boroughs of New York City. The borough is also coextensive with New York County, one of the original counties of the U.S. state ...
, where she lived the rest of her life.


Artwork

Steckel began showing her work in both solo and group exhibitions beginning in the late 1960s. Her first publicly recognized work, a photomontage series titled "Mom Art" in 1963, included critiques of racism, war, and sexual inequalities. In her "Giant Woman" series of works, Steckel painted oversized nude women onto photographs of city scenes, an idea associated with a
Women's movement The feminist movement (also known as the women's movement, or feminism) refers to a series of social movements and political campaigns for radical and liberal reforms on women's issues created by the inequality between men and women. Such is ...
theme that women had "outgrown their roles" in society as previously defined.Middleman, Rachel. "Anita Steckel: The Feminist Art of Sexual Politics." ''Women in the Arts'' 32:1 (Winter/Spring 2014), pp. 22-25. In 1972, her work was exhibited at the
Women's Interart Center The Women's Interart Center was a New York City–based multidisciplinary arts organization conceived as an artists' collective in 1969 and formally delineated in 1970 under the auspices of Women Artists in Revolution (WAR) and Feminists in the Ar ...
in New York alongside pieces by the influential feminist artists
Judy Chicago Judy Chicago (born Judith Sylvia Cohen; July 20, 1939) is an American feminist artist, art educator, and writer known for her large collaborative art installation pieces about birth and creation images, which examine the role of women in history ...
,
Miriam Schapiro Miriam Schapiro (also known as Mimi) (November 15, 1923 – June 20, 2015) was a Canadian-born artist based in the United States. She was a painter, sculptor, printmaker, and a pioneer of feminist art. She was also considered a leader of the Pa ...
and Faith Ringgold. Steckel came to public attention after her solo exhibition, ''The Sexual Politics of Feminist Art'', held at
Rockland Community College Rockland Community College (RCC) is a public community college in the town of Ramapo, New York in Rockland County. It is part of the State University of New York. The college, established in 1959, became the 18th community college to join the ...
in 1972. The exhibition was controversial because Steckel's work was sexually explicit and some local authorities called for the closure of the show, or at least to move it to a "more appropriate venue" such as the men or women's restroom.Richard Meyer, "Hard Targets: Male Bodies, Feminist Art and the Force of Censorship," in Cornelia Butler and Lisa G. Mark, eds., ''Wack!: Art and the Feminist Revolution''. Los Angeles: The Museum of Contemporary Art, 2007. Print. She later explained that the Giant Women Series photomontages were a response to what she felt, that "men seemed to own the city." In ''The New York Skyline'' series a mother feeds her muscle-man son sperm and tells him to "Eat your power honey before it grows cold." She created a series of artworks concerning erections, in defense of which she said, “If the erect penis is not wholesome enough to go into museums, it should not be considered wholesome enough to go into women.” The political content of her art was not limited to feminism, extending to larger issues of justice, and she explained that "When you come from a culture that has been the underdog in a very brutal way, you tend to speak out against injustice." Her immigrant parents were not religiously observant, but Jewish culture was part of her childhood experience, and the content of her adult art contains these cultural references. In ''Skylines of New York'' the Hudson River is filled with gefilte fish and Hitler "is depicted as a patriarchal menace with his throat being sliced by a nude female figure wielding an ax between her legs." In 2001, Steckel's work was exhibited at the Mitchell Algus Gallery.


References


External links

*
The Estate of Anita Steckel
Official Website
Anita Steckel Papers, 1940-2012
at
National Museum of Women in the Arts The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA), located in Washington, D.C., is "the first museum in the world solely dedicated" to championing women through the arts. NMWA was incorporated in 1981 by Wallace and Wilhelmina Holladay. Since openin ...
{{DEFAULTSORT:Steckel, Anita 1930 births 2012 deaths Artists from New York City Feminist artists Jewish American artists American contemporary artists 20th-century American women artists 20th-century American artists Art Students League of New York faculty American women academics 21st-century American Jews 21st-century American women